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Solid Waste Management

City awaits bio-medical waste, garbage treatment plants

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Indian Express 19.08.2009

City awaits bio-medical waste, garbage treatment plants

It will be a year in September since a blast at the bio-medical waste treatment facility at Kailash crematorium near Naidu Hospital killed seven of its employees. The Maharashtra Pollution Control Board (MPCB) closed down the facility and till date the authorities have been unable to find an alternative treatment facility for city’s bio-medical waste. The result: about 1,250 kg of hazardous bio-medical waste gets carried to Chinchwad, Talegaon, Satara and Taloja (some 140 km from Thane) for treatment.

The Pune Municipal Corporation (PMC) cancelled its contract with Sun Enviro Management Private Limited that was running the bio-medical waste disposal plant following the accident. It has been only two months that Passco Environment Solutions has been awarded the contract to upgrade the bio-medical waste facility at Kailash crematorium and the new facility will start working next month.

But the undue delay in restarting the treatment plant has been questioned as the new facility is coming up exactly where the earlier one was situated; there was no land acquisition or other time-consuming issues involved. Since January 2009, Passco, that is already handling the bio-waste treatment in Pimpri-Chinchwad, has been picking up the waste from hospitals/ clinics in the city.

“So far we have three vehicles collecting the waste from over 700 hospitals and 1,200 clinics. Four more vehicles will soon be pressed into service. The work was like building a factory here,” said Pradeep Mulay, director, Passco. The incinerator will have the capacity to dispose of 150 kg bio-medical waste every hour.

“Lessons need to be learnt especially as Pune has seen many deaths due to swine flu. Improper handling of the bio-medical waste can lead to a larger health hazard. People are not careful about disposing of used masks. This is scary as the virus, if present, can last from two to eight hours on a solid surface. A city like Pune should have had an immediate alternative in place instead of sending the waste so many kilometres away, “ said Dr Dilip Sarda, city unit chief of the IMA.

According to P K Mirashe, regional officer, MPCB, notices had been served to several doctors for not properly disposing their waste. It was only after the threat of cancelling their registrations that several doctors had paid fines and joined the waste disposal system.

Garbage dumping

With a December deadline for closure of the dumping of garbage at Uruli Devachi village staring at the city, the PMC is yet to identify an alternative site for dumping city’s 1,300 tonnes of garbage generated every day. “The civic body has given assurance to villagers of Uruli Devachi that dumping of garbage will be stopped by December. The civic body is talking to the district collectorate about the issue,” deputy municipal commissioner Suresh Jagtap said. A couple of alternative sites have been located, but no concrete decision has been taken yet. He said, “The civic body is also constructing small bio-gas plants so that the garbage generated within the area is disposed of there itself.”

Last Updated on Wednesday, 19 August 2009 11:08
 

HC warns civic body over waste dump

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The Hindu - Karnataka 19.08.2009

HC warns civic body over waste dump

Staff Reporter


PIL challenged construction of dump close to source of drinking water

Inspection report of the Karnataka State Pollution Control Board considered


Bangalore: The Karnataka High Court on Tuesday came down heavily on the Sakleshpur Town Municipality for the manner in which it had constructed a hazardous waste dump adjacent to Malali village in Sakleshpur taluk of Hassan district.

A Division Bench comprising the Chief Justice, P.D. Dinakaran, and Justice V.G. Sabhahit asked the civic body to rectify all defects in the construction of the dump within seven days. It said in case the defects are not removed or rectified, the dump would have to be shifted elsewhere.

The Bench passed the order on a public interest litigation (PIL) by Shantaraju and others of Malali village. The petitioners had challenged the construction of the dump close to a source of drinking water, school and hospital.

The Bench took on record an inspection report of the Karnataka State Pollution Control Board (KSPCB) which pointed out several defects in the dump site. The Bench asked the report to be placed before the Hassan Deputy Commissioner and asked him to initiate action in case the violations are not rectified.

A Division Bench directed the Chief Secretary to file a report on whether 34 acres of land at Arsinaguppe village in Chikmagalur district was forest land or revenue land.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 19 August 2009 04:56
 

E-waste may fall on manufacturer’s lap

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The Hindu - Karnataka 19.08.2009

E-waste may fall on manufacturer’s lap

Deepa Kurup

Centre to look at proposed draft rules on e-waste management

 


Recycling of e-waste to be regulated better

Most companies do not have e-waste system


— A FILE PHOTO: Mohammed Yousuf

TRASHED: Technicians dismantle discarded electronic devices.

BANGALORE: Manufacturers of electronic and electrical equipment in India may soon find that managing e-waste or implementing “take-back initiatives” is more than a voluntary token of corporate social responsibility.

If the draft rules on environmentally sound e-waste management — submitted recently to the Union Ministry of Environment and Forests last week — are adopted as legislation, then manufacturing firms will be held accountable for the product till the end of its life cycle.

With Individual Producer Responsibility at its core, this will put in place an effective mechanism to regulate generation, collection and environmentally sound recycling of e-waste. Significantly, it lays down guidelines to restrict the use of hazardous substances by ensuring manufacturers’ compliance with the European Union directive (2003) on restriction of hazardous substances (RoHS).

The proposed legislation, to be enforced under the Environment (Protection) Act, is unique as it has the “dual blessings of industry and civil society”, as Vinnie Mehta, Director of Manufacturers’ Association for Information Technology, puts it. The draft is a result of year-long consultations coordinated by industry body MAIT and green organisations GTZ, Toxic Links and Greenpeace. This, if accepted, will be a first standalone policy on e-waste.

By including all stakeholders – producers, retailers and even bulk consumers – the policy is critical. Given that 3.8 lakh tonnes of e-waste was generated in India in 2007 — estimated to touch 4.7 lakh tonnes by 2011— according to a MAIT-GTZ report, this policy is critical. Further, the study said 94 per cent of the companies did not have e-waste programme. To ramp up accountability, it is proposed that products should be tagged with numbers or codes for tracking the product in the e-waste management system.

Producers will “transparently” finance and manage the e-waste generated through a consortium of producers and stakeholders.

This consortium would be responsible for production waste, organise collection of used equipment, designate dealers and recyclers, and create awareness about hazardous constituents.

All firms will submit annual reports on sales and e-waste collection, and dealers, collection centres and bulk consumers will report to the State Pollution Control Boards.

The MAIT-GTZ report pointed out that 96 per cent of the e-waste was recycled in the informal sector. It estimated that about 50,000 tonnes was illegally imported every year. The draft policy stated that no import of used electrical/electronic equipment would be allowed for recycling or disposal.

Toxic metals

E-waste, per se, was not hazardous. It might contain hazardous elements, which when dismantled and processed, might be hazardous to the health of those who handled it — often children — and the environment. Enforcing the RoHS directive on use of materials was critical as it nipped the problem in the bud. As it stood, the assembly-oriented industry was largely RoHS-compliant because of the global nature of the market (most countries have enforced this), said Mr. Mehta.

However, the component industry — making resistors and capacitors — continues to use metals such as lead, chromium and mercury.

In March 2008, MoEF released “voluntary” guidelines for e-waste management and the Hazardous Waste Management Handling Rules (1998) was amended to include e-waste. “But this is not legally binding and given the magnitude of the problem, a law was crucial. It can change the whole scenario, and then we can take this forward to other sectors too,” says Abhishek Pratap, campaigner for Greenpeace.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 19 August 2009 04:53
 


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